Coraciidae: taxon details and analytics

Domain
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Coraciiformes
Family
Coraciidae
Genus
Species
Scientific Name
Coraciidae

Summary description from Wikipedia:

Coraciidae

Coraciidae () is a family of Old World birds, which are known as rollers because of the aerial acrobatics some of these birds perform during courtship or territorial flights. The family contains 13 species and is divided into two genera. Rollers resemble crows in size and build, and share the colourful appearance of kingfishers and bee-eaters, blues and pinkish or cinnamon browns predominating. The two inner front toes are connected, but not the outer one.

They are mainly insect eaters, with Eurystomus species taking their prey on the wing, and those of the genus Coracias diving from a perch to catch food items from on the ground, like giant shrikes.

Although living rollers are birds of warm climates in the Old World, fossil records show that rollers were present in North America during the Eocene. They are monogamous and nest in an unlined hole in a tree or in masonry, and lay 2–4 eggs in the tropics, 3–6 at higher latitudes. The eggs, which are white, hatch after 17–20 days, and the young remain in the nest for approximately another 30 days.

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Coraciidae in languages:

Afrikaans
Troupante
Bokmål
Råkefamilien
Bokmål
Råker
Bulgarian
Синявицови
Czech
mandelíkovití
Danish
Ellekrager
Dutch
Scharrelaars
English
Rollers
Finnish
sininärhet
French
Rolliers & rolles
German
Racken
Hungarian
szalakóták
Italian
Coracidi
Japanese
ブッポウソウ科
Korean
파랑새과
Portuguese
Rolieiros
Russian
Сизоворонковые
Swedish
blåkråkor
Thai
นกตะขาบ

Images from inaturalist.org observations:

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Coraciidae
©Luan Mai Sy, some rights reserved (CC-BY-NC)
Coraciidae
©Luan Mai Sy, some rights reserved (CC-BY-NC)
Coraciidae
©Parisa Atai, some rights reserved (CC-BY-NC)
Coraciidae
©Biswas Sajib, some rights reserved (CC-BY-NC)